[EL] Pay-to-play will thrive in budget debate
Craig Holman
holman at aol.com
Thu Sep 22 12:56:31 PDT 2011
Trevor correctly points out that laundered contributions by government contractors are not disclosed at all, not even to political scientists. But it is also very time-consuming and difficult for political scientists and reporters to connect the dots between the itemized contribution database in the FEC files, with the level of occupational employment of each itemized contributor with a company, and with whether that company is a government contractor. The executive order would make all this information available in one database easily accessible by the public.
Craig Holman, Ph.D.
Government Affairs Lobbyist
Public Citizen
215 Pennsylvania Avenue NE
Washington, D.C. 20003
TEL: (202) 454-5182
CEL: (202) 905-7413
FAX: (202) 547-7392
Holman at aol.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Trevor Potter <tpotter at capdale.com>
To: Smith, Brad <BSmith at law.capital.edu>; Joseph Birkenstock <jbirkenstock at capdale.com>; Craig Holman <holman at aol.com>; law-election <law-election at UCI.EDU>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 2:00 pm
Subject: RE: Re: [EL] Pay-to-play will thrive in budget debate
How , exactly, do we know that Solyndra gave no money to C4s or C 6s or other
non-disclosing groups to finance political expenditures?? That information is
exactly what is currently not disclosed by federal contractors...
Trevor Potter
Sent by Good Messaging (www.good.com)
-----Original Message-----
From: Smith, Brad [mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu]
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 12:55 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Joseph Birkenstock; Craig Holman; law-election at UCI.EDU
Subject: Re: [EL] Pay-to-play will thrive in budget debate
Solyndra wouldn't have been affected at all by the type of disclosure Craig and
Joe seek. The company's unknown spending was on lobbying, not campaign
contributions. The contributions of executives were already disclosed; the
company itself did not make campaign expenditures, which were, we note, illegal
at the time it got the loan guarantees anyway. Indeed, it is the fact that these
disclosures are already required that allowed Prof. Zullo to conduct his
research uncovering the "suspicious pattern."
The question is not whether companies inform "officeholders and party officials"
whom they support or oppose but whether we insist that they include that
information, including data on the activities of their employees and data on
giving that is not necessarily related to politics at all, on their applications
to be reviewed by purchasing officials. Craig and Joe still offer no reason for
requiring that disclosure.
Bradley A. Smith
Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault
Designated Professor of Law
Capital University Law School
303 East Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215
(614) 236-6317
bsmith at law.capital.edu <mailto:bsmith at law.capital.edu>
http://www.law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.asp <http://www.law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.asp>
From: law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu [mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu]
On Behalf Of Joseph Birkenstock
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 12:41 PM
To: Craig Holman; law-election at uci.edu
Subject: Re: [EL] Pay-to-play will thrive in budget debate
Craig, stop being silly. Everyone knows corruption in government contracting
only comes when political spending of the prospective contractors is broadly
disclosed to the public, not when that information is privately known only to a
subset of activists and politicians. For example, I recall several long chains
of commentary attacking the way that public disclosure (but only public
disclosure) will lead to the enforcement of an "enemies list" of business
partners that are presumptively unwelcome as government vendors.
In fact, it seems to me that every instance of reconsideration of the DISCLOSE
Act or policies toward the same effect has launched a mini-flood of tweets under
the #enemieslist hashtag - but never any consideration of whether a private list
of political help from companies known only to friendly public officeholders
could have any similar corrupting effect.
To be sure, there haven't been any tweet floods at all, large or small, under
the #friendslist hashtag. Haven't you been paying attention?
________________________________
Joseph M. Birkenstock, Esq.
Caplin & Drysdale, Chtd.
One Thomas Circle, NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 862-7836
www.capdale.com/jbirkenstock
*also admitted to practice in CA
From: law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu [mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu]
On Behalf Of Craig Holman
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 11:36 AM
To: law-election at uci.edu
Subject: [EL] Pay-to-play will thrive in budget debate
Colleagues:
Below is a snippet of an op-ed I published in Roll Call today on the
supercommittee and pay-to-play corruption. It would have been appropriate to
mention the Solyndra issue (but the story broke after I wrote the piece), in
which many congressional Republicans are beginning to realize -- in
contradiction to their opposition to Obama's proposed transparency executive
order -- that the lack of full disclosure of political spending by government
contractors may result in pay-to-play favoritism in the awarding of contracts.
http://www.rollcall.com/issues/57_33/craig_holman_pay_to_play_will_thrive_budget_debate-208921-1.html
Pay-to-play corruption thrives in the shadows. As long as the public is
generally kept in the dark as to how much a corporation is spending on behalf of
super committee officials and their respective parties, pay-to-play can be an
exceedingly effective tool in shaping the budget debate.
There is a viable solution that could take effect almost immediately: a proposed
executive order under consideration by President Barack Obama that would require
government contractors to fully disclose their campaign contributions and
expenditures to the public, including corporate funds for spending on elections
laundered through third-party groups.
Craig Holman, Ph.D.
Government Affairs Lobbyist
Public Citizen
215 Pennsylvania Avenue NE
Washington, D.C. 20003
TEL: (202) 454-5182
CEL: (202) 905-7413
FAX: (202) 547-7392
Holman at aol.com
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